Docklands News

Sales and prices surge following stamp duty cut

Property sales are up by 20% and average asking prices have risen by £10,000 in the four weeks since a cut in stamp duty, according to Bank of England data. Average asking prices are £30,000 higher and thousands more sales are being agreed each week than before the lockdown from March 27 to May 13. The number of sales per week is 65% higher than last year with average asking prices 14% higher. However, analysts believe the rise is a bubble, and the true effects of the economic crash are yet to arrive. Pablo Shah, a senior economist at the CEBR, says: "The stamp duty cut is propping up the market this summer but it won't be sufficient to negate the effect of the end of the furlough scheme and mortgage payment deferrals later this year."

The Times (14/08/2020)

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First-time buyers have to find niche mortgages

First-time buyers are having to resort to increasingly complex mortgages as banks have become reluctant to offer loans to customers with smaller deposits. In the case of a joint borrower, sole proprietor loan, a parent contributes to monthly repayments but they are not named on the property deeds. In other cases parents can act as a guarantor to allow their children to take out a loan. Another option is a family offset mortgage, where the parent places cash into a linked savings account, reducing the interest charged to their children. It comes as Barclays is now the only big lender still offering Bank of Mum and Dad-style mortgages. Andrew Montlake, managing director of mortgage broker Coreco, said that banks are nervous of people relying on parental support to pay the mortgage.

The Sunday Telegraph (16/08/2020)   The Sunday Times (16/08/2020)

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GLA gives go-ahead for new Silvertown neighbourhood

A new neighbourhood in Silvertown, has been given the go-ahead by the Greater London Authority. Jules Pipe, London’s deputy mayor for planning, has given permission for Thameside West, a 5m sq ft residential-led, mixed-use development brought forward by Keystone London and GLA Land & Property, comprising 5,000 new homes, 205,000 sq ft of office space, and 75,400 sq ft of retail and leisure space. A master plan by Foster + Partners also includes 5.7 acres of public open space, including a new 4-acre riverside park, a new DLR station, a primary school, nursery, and other community facilities. The decision means that Keystone and GLAP can start on the development’s first phase, designed by John McAslan & Partners, comprising 401 mixed-tenure homes and 35,000 sq ft of workspace.

Property Week (06/08/2020)   Building Design (10/08/2020)   PBC Today (10/08/2020) 

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First-time buyer homes on the market at Wardian London

The first of 136 affordable homes at Wardian London, one of eight new landmark developments at Canary Wharf, have just gone on sale. The two-tower development on Marsh Wall, one standing 600 ft high, the other 558 ft, forms a vertical village of 624 homes; and, while the penthouse apartments have price tags as tall as their heights, a shared-ownership scheme means a quarter-share of an apartment can be had for as little as £150,250. Each has an open-plan layout, floor-to-ceiling windows to make the most of the views, and a private wraparound corner terrace or a balcony. The entire scheme has a botanical theme with a double-height lobby filled with exotic plants, flowers and trees. There are also glamorous greenhouse-style pocket gardens throughout the buildings, which developer EcoWorld Ballymore says were inspired by the glasshouses of Kew Gardens

B Daily (11/08/2020)  

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First residents move into newly-completed Canary Wharf neighbourhood

The newly-completed 10 Park Drive neighbourhood at Wood Wharf has welcomed its first 50 residents. Brian De’ath, director of residential sales at Canary Wharf Group, commented: “East London has seen a rise in popularity for a number of years and the gradual completion of Wood Wharf will only enhance its desirability”. Only 70 apartments remain for sale at the Stanton Williams-designed building.

Evening Standard (11/08/2020)  

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House prices surge to all-time high

House prices rallied to the highest levels on record in July as months of pent-up buyer demand was released. Prices saw an uptick for the first time since the lockdown began, according to the latest Halifaxhouse price index, growing on average 1.6% after months of downturn. This brings the price of the average UK home to £241,604 - up 3.8% on last year despite the decline in the first half of 2020. But experts warn the recovery may be short-lived as the furlough scheme nears its end and fears of the health of the economy loom. Some 63,250 homes were bought and sold in June, a rise of 31.7% from May following the Government's lifting of lockdown measures and the introduction of the stamp duty cut.

Daily Mail (07/08/2020)   The Guardian (07/08/2020)   The Independent (07/08/2020)   The Daily Telegraph (07/08/2020)  

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